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Electrical Drives (EPO640)

Rahimi Baharom (SMIEEE,MIET, MIEM)


Senior Lecturer
Faculty of Electrical Engineering
Universiti Teknologi MARA, MALAYSIA

SESSION SEPT 2017 – JAN 2018


Brushless DC Motor
(BLDC)
INTRODUCTION
 The BLDC motor is widely used in applications
including appliances, automotive, aerospace,
consumer, medical, automated industrial equipment
and instrumentation.

 The BLDC motor is electrically commutated by power


switches instead of brushes.
Compared with a brushed DC motor or an induction
motor, the BLDC motor has many advantages:

a. Higher efficiency and reliability - BLDC motors do not


have brushes, meaning they are more reliable and
have life expectancies of over 10,000 hours. This
results in fewer instances of replacement or repair
and less overall down time.
b. Lower acoustic noise.
c. Smaller and lighter.
d. Greater dynamic response.
e. Better speed versus torque characteristics.
f. Higher speed range - A BLDC motor can operate at
speeds above 10,000 rpm under loaded and
unloaded conditions.
THE CONSTRUCTION OF BLDC MOTOR
STATOR

There are three classifications of the BLDC


motor: single-phase, two-phase and three-
phase.

The single-phase and three-phase motors are


the most widely used.
 Figure below shows the simplified cross section of a
single-phase and a three-phase BLDC motor.

Simplified BLDC Motor Diagrams

 The rotor has permanent magnets to form 2


magnetic pole pairs, and surrounds the stator, which
has the windings.
 A single-phase motor has one stator winding—
wound either clockwise or counter-clockwise
along each arm of the stator—to produce four
magnetic poles as shown in Figure (a).
 By comparison, a three-phase motor has three
windings as shown in Figure (b). Each phase turns
on sequentially to make the rotor revolve.
There are two types of stator windings:
trapezoidal and sinusoidal, which refers to the
shape of the back electromotive force (BEMF)
signal.
 The shape of the BEMF is determined by different
coil interconnections and the distance of the air
gap.

 In addition to the BEMF, the phase current also


follows a trapezoidal and sinusoidal shape.

 A sinusoidal motor produces smoother


electromagnetic torque than a trapezoidal motor,
though at a higher cost due to their use of extra
copper windings.

 A BLDC motor uses a simplified structure with


trapezoidal stator windings.
ROTOR
 A rotor consists of a shaft and a hub with permanent
magnets arranged to form between two to eight pole
pairs that alternate between north and south poles.
Figure below shows cross sections of three kinds of
magnets arrangements in a rotor.

Rotor Magnets Cross-Sections


4 POLE AND 8 POLE PERMANENT MAGNET ROTOR
 There are multiple magnet materials, such as
ferrous mixtures and rare-earth alloys.

 Ferrite magnets are traditional and relatively


inexpensive, though rare-earth alloy magnets are
becoming increasingly popular because of their
high magnetic density.

 The higher density helps to shrink rotors while


maintaining high relative torque when compared
to similar ferrite magnets.
THE OPERATION OF BLDC MOTOR

1) Have three Hall sensors embedded into the stator on the non-driving end of
the motor. This embedded is complex process because any misalignment with
respect rotor magnet will generate an error in determination of rotor
position. Halls Sensors sense the position of the coils.
2) The Decoder Circuit turns appropriate switches ON and OFF
3) The voltage through the specific coils turns the motor
4) When electric current passes through a coil in a magnetic field, the magnetic
force produces a torque which turns the motor.
THE APPLICATIONS OF BLDC MOTOR

1. Computer hard drives


2. CD/DVD players.
3. Small cooling fans in electronic equipment
4. Cordless power tools where the increased efficiency of the motor leads to longer
periods of use before the battery needs to be charged.
5. Low speed, low power BLDC motors - direct-drive turntables for "analog" audio
discs.
6. High power BLDC motors - electric vehicles and hybrid vehicles.
7. Electric bicycles
STEPPER MOTOR
INTRODUCTION
 A stepper motor or step motor or stepping motor is a
brushless DC electric motor that divides a full rotation into a
number of equal steps.

 The motor's position can then be commanded to move and


hold at one of these steps without any feedback sensor (an
open-loop controller), as long as the motor is carefully sized
to the application in respect to torque and speed.
FUNDAMENTALS OF OPERATION
 The stepper motor is known by its property to convert a train of
input pulses (typically square wave pulses) into a precisely
defined increment in the shaft position.

 Each pulse moves the shaft through a fixed angle.

 Stepper motors effectively have multiple "toothed"


electromagnets arranged around a central gear-shaped piece of
iron.
FUNDAMENTALS OF OPERATION
 The electromagnets are energized by an external driver circuit
or a micro controller.

 To make the motor shaft turn, first, one electromagnet is given


power, which magnetically attracts the gear's teeth.

 When the gear's teeth are aligned to the first electromagnet,


they are slightly offset from the next electromagnet.

 This means that when the next electromagnet is turned on and


the first is turned off, the gear rotates slightly to align with the
next one.
FUNDAMENTALS OF OPERATION
 From there the process is repeated. Each of those rotations is
called a "step", with an integer number of steps making a full
rotation.

 In that way, the motor can be turned by a precise angle.


TYPES OF STEPPER MOTORS
 There are three main types of stepper motors:

a) Permanent magnet stepper


b) Hybrid synchronous stepper
c) Variable reluctance stepper

 Permanent magnet motors use a permanent magnet (PM) in


the rotor and operate on the attraction or repulsion between
the rotor PM and the stator electromagnets.

 Variable reluctance (VR) motors have a plain iron rotor and


operate based on the principle that minimum reluctance
occurs with minimum gap, hence the rotor points are attracted
toward the stator magnet poles.
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS
 A simplified diagram of a 30° per step VR stepping motor is shown in Figure
below:

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 The stator is made from a stack of steel laminations, and has six equally
spaced projecting poles, or teeth, each carrying a separate coil.

 The rotor, which may be solid or laminated, has four projecting teeth, of the
same width as the stator teeth.
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS
 A simplified diagram of a 30° per step VR stepping motor is shown in Figure
below:

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 There is a very small air-gap – typically between 0.02 and 0.2 mm – between
rotor and stator teeth.

 When no current is flowing in any of the stator coils, the rotor will therefore
be completely free to rotate.
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS
 Diametrically opposite pairs of stator coils are connected in
series, such that when one of them acts as a N pole, the other
acts as a S pole.

 There are thus three independent stator circuits, or phases,


and each one can be supplied with direct current from the
drive circuit.
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 When phase A is energised (as indicated by the thick lines in


(a)), a magnetic field with its axis along the stator poles of
phase A is created.

 The rotor is therefore attracted into a position where the pair


of rotor poles distinguished by the marker arrow line up with
the field, i.e. in line with the phase A pole, as shown in Figure
(a).
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 When phase A is switched-off, and phase B is switched-on


instead, the second pair of rotor poles will be pulled into
alignment with the stator poles of phase B, the rotor moving
through 30° clockwise to its new step position, as shown in (b).
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 A further clockwise step of 30° will occur when phase B is


switched-off and phase C is switched-on.

 At this stage the original pair of rotor poles come into play
again, but this time they are attracted to stator poles C, as
shown in Figure (c).
VARIABLE RELUCTANCE MOTORS

Principle of operation of 30° per step variable reluctance stepping motor

 By repetitively switching on the stator phases in the sequence


ABCA, etc. the rotor will rotate clockwise in 30° steps, while if
the sequence is ACBA, etc. it will rotate anticlockwise.

 This mode of operation is known as ‘one-phase-on’, and is the


simplest way of making the motor step.
PERMANENT MAGNET STEPPER MOTORS
 The Permanent Magnet Stepper Motor has a stator
construction similar to that of the single stack variable
reluctance motor.

 They have higher inertia and therefore, lower acceleration


than variable stepper motors.

 The Permanent Magnet stepper motor produces more torque


than the Variable Reluctance Stepper Motor.
TWO-PHASE STEPPER MOTORS
 There are two basic winding arrangements for the
electromagnetic coils in a two phase stepper motor:

a) unipolar and

b) bipolar.
UNIPOLAR MOTORS
 A unipolar stepper motor has one winding with center tap per phase. Each section
of windings is switched ON for each direction of magnetic field.

 Since in this arrangement a magnetic pole can be reversed without switching the
direction of current, the commutation circuit can be made very simple (e.g., a
single transistor) for each winding.

Unipolar stepper motor coils


UNIPOLAR MOTORS

Unipolar stepper motor coils

 Typically, given a phase, the center tap of each winding is made common: giving
three leads per phase and six leads for a typical two phase motor. Often, these two
phase commons are internally joined, so the motor has only five leads.

 A micro controller or stepper motor controller can be used to activate the drive
transistors in the right order, and this ease of operation makes unipolar motors
popular with hobbyists; they are probably the cheapest way to get precise angular
movements.
BIPOLAR MOTORS
 Bipolar motors have a single winding per phase.

 The current in a winding needs to be reversed in order to


reverse a magnetic pole, so the driving circuit must be more
complicated, typically with an H-bridge arrangement (however
there are several off-the-shelf driver chips available to make
this a simple affair).
ADVANTAGES OF STEPPER MOTORS
 Positioning – Since steppers move in precise repeatable steps,
they excel in applications requiring precise positioning such as
3D printers, Computer Numeric Control (CNC), Camera
platforms and X,Y Plotters. Some disk drives also use stepper
motors to position the read/write head.

 Speed Control – Precise increments of movement also allow for


excellent control of rotational speed for process automation
and robotics.

 Low Speed Torque - Normal DC motors don't have very much


torque at low speeds. A Stepper motor has maximum torque at
low speeds, so they are a good choice for applications requiring
low speed with high precision.
DISANVANTAGES OF STEPPER
MOTORS
 Low Efficiency – Unlike DC motors, stepper motor current
consumption is independent of load. They draw the most
current when they are doing no work at all. Because of this,
they tend to run hot.
 Limited High Speed Torque - In general, stepper motors have
less torque at high speeds than at low speeds. Some steppers
are optimized for better high-speed performance, but they
need to be paired with an appropriate driver to achieve that
performance.
 No Feedback – Unlike servo motors, most steppers do not have
integral feedback for position. Although great precision can be
achieved running ‘open loop’. Limit switches or ‘home’
detectors are typically required for safety and/or to establish a
reference position.
SUMMARY
 The construction of stepping motors is simple, the only moving
part being the rotor, which has no windings, commutator or
brushes: they are therefore robust and reliable.

 The rotor is held at its step position solely by the action of the
magnetic flux between stator and rotor.

 The step angle is a property of the tooth geometry and the


arrangement of the stator windings, and accurate punching and
assembly of the stator and rotor laminations is therefore
necessary to ensure that adjacent step positions are exactly
equally spaced.
SUMMARY
 The step angle is obtained from the expression

 The variable reluctance (VR) motor as discuss in the previous


section has four rotor teeth, three stator phase windings and
the step angle is therefore 30°, as already shown.

 It should also be clear from the equation why small angle


motors always have to have a large number of rotor teeth.

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